Le Cam Sabrina, Daguin-Thiébaut Claire, Bouchemousse Sarah, Engelen Aschwin H, Mieszkowska Nova, Viard Frédérique
Station Biologique de Roscoff, CNRS Laboratory Adaptation & Diversity in Marine Environments (UMR 7144 CNRS SU), Sorbonne Université Roscoff France.
Center for Marine Sciences (CCMAR) University of Algarve Faro Portugal.
Evol Appl. 2019 Aug 14;13(3):500-514. doi: 10.1111/eva.12837. eCollection 2020 Mar.
Twenty years of genetic studies of marine invaders have shown that successful invaders are often characterized by native and introduced populations displaying similar levels of genetic diversity. This pattern is presumably due to high propagule pressure and repeated introductions. The opposite pattern is reported in this study of the brown seaweed, , an emblematic species for circumglobal invasions. Albeit demonstrating polymorphism in the native range, microsatellites failed to detect any genetic variation over 1,269 individuals sampled from 46 locations over the Pacific-Atlantic introduction range. Single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) obtained from ddRAD sequencing revealed some genetic variation, but confirmed severe founder events in both the Pacific and Atlantic introduction ranges. Our study thus exemplifies the need for extreme caution in interpreting neutral genetic diversity as a proxy for invasive potential. Our results confirm a previously hypothesized transoceanic secondary introduction from NE Pacific to Europe. However, the SNP panel unexpectedly revealed two additional distinct genetic origins of introductions. Also, conversely to scenarios based on historical records, southern rather than northern NE Pacific populations could have seeded most of the European populations. Finally, the most recently introduced populations showed the lowest selfing rates, suggesting higher levels of recombination might be beneficial at the early stage of the introduction process (i.e., facilitating evolutionary novelties), whereas uniparental reproduction might be favored later in sustainably established populations (i.e., sustaining local adaptation).
二十年来对海洋入侵物种的遗传学研究表明,成功的入侵物种通常具有本地种群和引入种群呈现相似遗传多样性水平的特征。这种模式可能归因于高繁殖体压力和多次引入。在这项对褐藻(一种全球入侵的标志性物种)的研究中报告了相反的模式。尽管在原生范围内表现出多态性,但微卫星未能在从太平洋 - 大西洋引入范围内的46个地点采集的1269个个体中检测到任何遗传变异。从ddRAD测序获得的单核苷酸多态性(SNP)揭示了一些遗传变异,但证实了太平洋和大西洋引入范围内都存在严重的奠基者事件。因此,我们的研究例证了在将中性遗传多样性解释为入侵潜力指标时需要极其谨慎。我们的结果证实了先前假设的从东北太平洋到欧洲的跨洋二次引入。然而,SNP分析意外地揭示了另外两个不同的引入遗传起源。此外,与基于历史记录的情况相反,东北太平洋南部而非北部的种群可能是大多数欧洲种群的来源。最后,最近引入的种群显示出自交率最低,这表明在引入过程的早期阶段更高水平的重组可能是有益的(即促进进化新奇性),而单亲繁殖可能在可持续建立的种群后期更受青睐(即维持局部适应性)。